David Urquhart's Holywar

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David Urquhart's Holywar Click here for Full Issue of EIR Volume 23, Number 16, April 12, 1996 I. Caucasus-Gateway to CentralAsia David Urquhart's holywar by Joseph Brewda and Linda de Hoyos In 1785, a Chechen leader, Naqshbandi Sufi Sheikh Mansur, raised the Chechen, Ingush, Ossetes, Kabard, Circassian, and Dagestani tribes in revolt against the steady advance of the Russian Empire into the Caucasus Mountains. Before 1774, the Caucasus and Transcaucasus region, now embrac­ ing Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, had been loosely ruled by the Persian and Ottoman empires. After Russia's victory over the Ottoman Empire in the war of 1768-74, the Russian military moved in on the Caucasus. Sheikh Mansur raised the flag of the "Mountain Peoples " against the czar. Although Mansur's 20,000-man force was crushed by the Russian onslaught in 1791, Sheikh Mansur became the hero of the Mountain Peoples, his revolt the inspiration for the uprisings in the Caucasus today. Strangely, Sheikh Mansur was not a Chechen. He had been born Giovanni Battista Boetti, and had been a Domini­ David Urquhart, Palmerston's Peripatetic. can monk before his conversion to Islam. Although Boetti's direct ties to Venice and London are not known, his rebellion served their geopolitical aims. The occasion of Urquhart's first trip to Turkey was the Years later, another hero of the Mountain Peoples 1833 Russo-Turkish treaty, through which Russia had virtu­ emerged. In .1837, James Bell, an agent of the British secret ally won control of the strategic Dardenelles. As Urquhart services who was touring the Caucasus, wrote in his memoirs wrote in a memorandum, his mission was: "by obtaining that "a Circassian prince pointed out [to me] the sacred spot the information necessary, to suggest measures of internal (as they justly esteem it) where Daud Bey had held Gust organization if the British government takes Turkey under three years ago) his meeting with the chieftains of this neigh­ its protection, or for meeting ...the disorganizing influence borhood, and first inspired them with the idea of combining of Russia in the contrary sense." themselves with the other inhabitants of the mountain prov­ Urquhart's mentor in instigating revolt in the Caucasus inces as a nation, under one government and standard." Daud was Prince Adam Czartoryski, an ethnic Pole who had been Bey had penned the declaration of independence of Circassia a Russian foreign minister during the Napoleonic wars, and and designed its flag. who later helped lead the failed 1830 Polish rebellion Daud Bey was not a native of the Caucasus either. His against Russia. name was David Urquhart, and he had been sent into the After that venture, Prince Czartoryski fled to Britain, region on a special mission in 1834 by British intelligence. where he was inducted into the British Foreign Ministry, with Urquhart had been a protege of Jeremy Bentham, the founder the mission of organizing insurrections against the Russian and head of the newly organized British secret services in Empire, becoming a patron of the Caucasus tribes and of the aftermath of the American Revolution. At the point that Urquhart. he was posted to the Ottoman Empire in 1833, Urquhart reported directly to Sir Herbert Taylor, private secretary to Full British support King William IV, as well as to Foreign Minister Lord During July and August 1834, Urquhart, posing as a Palmerston . businessman, toured the eastern shores of the Russian-con- 20 Strategic Studies EIR April 12, 1996 © 1996 EIR News Service Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission strictly prohibited. trolled Black Sea. Landing near the Anapa fortress, he met some 15 Circassian beys and 200 village chiefs, offering them salt, gunpowder, lead, and, eventually, full British support for revolt against Russia. General Thomson's Urquhart's mission was made all the easier by Russia's murderous oppression of the Caucasus people, zealously little war carried out by First Viceroy Mikhail Vorontsov. As Prince Kochubey explained to an American visitor at the time: "The by Joseph Brewda and Linda de Hoyos Circassians are like your American Indians-as untamable and uncivilized .... And owing to their natural energy or character, extermination only would keep them quiet." The next occasion for British interference in the Caucasus was "Daud Bey " was good to his word, as supplies and aid World War I.This time the intervention was not disguised.In flowed into the Caucasus. the aftermath of the March 1917 Menshevik revolution in In 1834, Urquhart published a pamphlet, England, Russia Russia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia declared them­ and Turkey, to drum up support for his developing rebellion. selves independent from Russian rule.The Chechens, Dage­ He argued that it was necessary for Britain and France to stanis, and other mountain tribes also declared independence check Russia's advance in the Caucasus in order to secure from Russia, and formed a Mountaineers Republic. Turkey. In 1835, Urquhart formed Portfolio, a publication But independence was short-lived.In November 1918, a dedicated to the "Eastern Question." His first issue published 23,000-man British expeditionary force led by Gen.William Russian secret dispatches allegedly confirming Russia's am­ Thomson invaded the Caucasus region via Persia.Thomson's bitions. A later issue featured his Circassian declaration force occupied the Batumi, Georgia-Baku, Azerbaijan rail­ of independence. way and other strategic points of what had been Russia, estab­ In 1836, Urquhart returned to Istanbul as secretary at lishing military governorships in Batumi, Baku, and other the British embassy.Toward the end of October, he outfitted areas in Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. Direct military a private schooner, the Vixen, to trade with the Circassians, occupation continued until their recapture by Russia in 1920. in defiance of Russian trade restrictions.In early April 1837 , In 1919, a British Foreign Office memorandum stressed the Russians seized the ship; the British ambassador to Tur­ the necessity for Britain to design a flexiblepolicy: "If Russia key called on Palmerston to send a fleet, but Palmerston recovers rapidly, they [Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and decided to avert a crisis at that time. the mountain tribes] might conceivably rejoin her in some By 1840, Circassian guerrilla actions against Russian federal relation; if the anarchy in Russia lasts many years, forces finally succeeded in sparking a general insurrection their present separation from her will probably be permanent. of all the Mountain Peoples-the Chechens, Ingush, Dage­ Our policy toward the Caucasus should be framed to meet stanis, and Kabardians. The insurrection was led by Sheikh either eventuality." Shamil of Dagestan, who, like the former Dominican monk In reality, this meant pursuing different options simulta­ Sheikh Mansur, was a leader of the Naqshbandi Sufi order. neously, all of them mutually exclusive (see Map 12), under Shamil created an Imamate which ruled the region with an Lord Palmerston' s dictum "no permanent allies, only perma­ iron fist. nent interests." During the 1853-56 Crimean War between Russia and For instance, in 1919, General Denikin's White Russian Britain, Britain considered invading the Caucasian Black Army, heavily backed by the British, invaded the Mountain­ Sea coast with the help of the Circassians, but scotched the eers Republic in Dagestan, whose primary patron was Lord option. At the 1856 Paris peace conference, London failed Curzon. in its bid to create a Circassian buffer state between Russia And, London fostered a constant state of conflict between and Turkey. its dependents Armenia and Azerbaijan, the center of which Even after the Crimean War, London continued to aid was the tug of war over the status of Karabakh. the Caucasus rebellion.Circassian chiefs traveled to Istanbul The Karabakh region had been an ancient Armenian cen­ to meet the British ambassador, Sir Henry Bulwer, to plan ter, but under the Mongols had been populated by the Azeris. operations. But Russian response to the rebellion became After Russia seized the region in the early nineteenth century, increasingly brutal.By the time the revolt was finally crushed Karabakh was repopulated by Armenians, becoming an Ar­ in 1864, more than I million Caucasians had either been menian enclave in the Azeri-populated czarist district of killed, or deported to the Ottoman Empire. Baku. "Daud Bey " had left the mountains long before.After the Jurisdiction over the enclave had become a heated emo­ Vixen incident, Urquhart officially left British government tional issue for both Azeris and Armenians.General Thomson service, insinuating himself as an adviser to the sultan of deliberately intensified the problem. the Ottoman Empire. While Thomson dished out military aid to Armenia and EIR April 12, 1996 Strategic Studies 21 .
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